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Paperback Fisher's Face Book

ISBN: 057123304X

ISBN13: 9780571233045

Fisher's Face

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

A portrait of Lord Admiral Jack Fisher, the commander of the British Navy at the turn of the century, examines his pivotal roles as a statesman, devout church-goer, lady's man, and leader. 15,000... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

An unclassifiable book on a unique genius!

This book is a delight. It does not fit easily into the categories of history, biography or psychology, and yet it has elements of all of them. The author has obviously written it for sheer personal pleasure and this sense of fun - of which the splendid Jacky Fisher himself would have thoroughly approved - is communicated to the reader. It is no fault of the writer that Fisher remains an enigma at the end of it, a man of vast contradictions, enthusiasms, energy, genius and simplicity, but the journey is enjoyable on every page. Fisher was a force of nature who tackled every challenge, regardless of size, with zest, verve and originality and the story of his whirlwind career, and his transformation of the Royal Navy has much of the epic about it. Few men can have had greater vision, or a greater gift for grasping the potential of technology for transforming organisations and national destinies. Much of what he did and said could serve as a textbook for today's business schools - while the rest might have marked him for a straitjacket. For all his greatness however, he was diminished by his last years and by Churchill's disastrous decision to recall him to the Admiralty soon after the outbreak of the First World War. Old, and by now unstable, his tenure was marked by huge miscalculations and personal behaviour that swung erratically between the inspired and the lunatic. Those who enjoy this unique book will be no less delighted by Fisher's idiosyncratic memoirs - entitled "Memories" - which are an eccentric and haphazard collection of ideas, reminiscences and dictums (slogans might be a better word). This is long out of print, but well worth the seeking.

Fun and Fascinating - Truly a Great Read!

I'm reading this book for the second time now and its every bit as fresh as during the first go round. Morris brings history alive as few others and has chosen a wonderfully exciting subject to biography. God, how we need more leaders like Jacky Fisher these days! And more writers like Morris. Well done, I'm searching the back list for your other titles.

An amazing book , a fascinating face

I read this book in Cyprus, and there, Fisher's adventures whilst Admiral of the Mediterranean fleet seemed strangely poignant. The book is so unusually written that I actually thought that I was about to meet him at any point. I wish that I had, because as a life long lover of the navy, I find Fisher to be a most compelling character. There can be few people in this century that would be a more interesting correspondent. I wish that I could write to him now on the Web instead of writing this. If there is a more revealing (and one always feels, only slightly speculative), colourful and fun biography about anyone at all, pray tell me about it because this book was truly superb!

"Well, what do 'ya think of our Jacky now ?"

For those of us who are thoroughly rapt with the Royal Navy; following Mr. Massies "Dreadnought", Mr. Manchesters volumes on Churchill, and Winstons volumes on himself; this book will make your day. Jan Morris via the wonders of surgery can take magnificently opposite points of view. In the same paragraph she/he can be the disgruntled fellow officer and a breath later the wife of that same affronted officer, enraptured by the demon Admiral Fisher; who has just put her husband down. Fisher was a man who would destroy many a career without compunction , but in such a way that the victims would name their first male child after him. Go figure. Winston-O-Files will find little here but two characters so similar, so individual, and so revolutionary, that they could have been twins. Ms. Morris writes this book in the second person taking us into Admiral Fishers quarters on board the "Renown" and letting the effusive and entertaining and somewhat comedic Admiral lead us on a tour of his life. Morris is clearly in love with Jacky and through attention and sensitivity writes a gripping and compassionate biography. Wedge this book in next to your Manchester and Churchill and, oh'ya, your James Morris
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